TPN Basics for Juniors

Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is intravenous nutrition used when the gut cannot be used safely.

It can be life-saving, but also carries significant risks.

The most important rule:

If the gut works, use it.

TPN is always second line.

This guide focuses on when to use it, when not to use it, and what juniors actually need to know on the ward.


What is TPN?

TPN = nutrition given via a central line containing:

  • Glucose (carbohydrate)
  • Amino acids (protein)
  • Lipids (fat)
  • Electrolytes
  • Vitamins & trace elements

It bypasses the gut completely.

Used only when enteral feeding is not possible.


First principle (most important)

Before thinking about TPN, always ask:

Can we feed the gut?

Because:

  • Enteral feeding is safer
  • Cheaper
  • Fewer infections
  • Better outcomes

If the gut works → use oral/NG/PEG feed.

TPN is last resort.


When should you consider TPN? (real-life indications)

Think TPN when:

Gut not usable:

  • Bowel obstruction
  • Ileus
  • Severe pancreatitis not tolerating enteral feed
  • High-output fistula
  • Short bowel
  • Severe malabsorption
  • Post-op complications
  • Prolonged NBM with no plan to feed

Or:

Inadequate intake:

  • Unable to eat >5–7 days
  • Not meeting needs enterally despite attempts

If patient can tolerate NG feeding → don’t jump to TPN.


When NOT to use TPN

Very common exam + ward mistakes.

Do NOT use TPN for:

  • Poor appetite
  • Mild dysphagia
  • Short-term NBM (1–2 days)
  • “Convenience”
  • Working gut

These patients need:

  • Dietitian input
  • Supplements
  • NG feeding

Not TPN.


Step 1 – Always involve the nutrition team

Juniors do NOT independently start TPN.

In real NHS practice:
👉 Refer to dietitian or nutrition team

They:

  • Calculate requirements
  • Prescribe TPN
  • Monitor safely

Your role = recognise need + refer early.


Step 2 – Central access is required

TPN is hyperosmolar.

It must go through:

  • PICC line
  • Hickman
  • Central line

Never peripheral cannula (except special short-term PPN).

Check line position before starting.


Step 3 – Know the risks (very important)

TPN is not benign.

Main complications:

🔴 Infection (most common + most dangerous)

  • Line sepsis
  • CLABSI

🔴 Electrolyte problems

  • Refeeding syndrome
  • Hypophosphataemia
  • Hypokalaemia

🔴 Metabolic

  • Hyperglycaemia
  • Fluid overload
  • Liver dysfunction

🔴 Mechanical

  • Line thrombosis
  • Pneumothorax (insertion)

This is why we avoid TPN unless necessary.


Step 4 – Monitoring (what juniors actually do daily)

If patient on TPN, you are often the one checking bloods.

Daily:

  • U&E
  • Magnesium
  • Phosphate
  • Glucose
  • Fluid balance
  • Weight

Regularly:

  • LFTs
  • Triglycerides

Look for:

  • Falling electrolytes
  • Sepsis
  • Hyperglycaemia

Most complications show up in bloods first.


🚨 When to worry on the ward

Escalate if:

  • Fever or rigors → possible line sepsis
  • Line redness/discharge
  • Hypotension
  • Rising CRP
  • Electrolytes crashing
  • Glucose persistently high
  • Deranged LFTs

If septic:
👉 treat as line infection until proven otherwise

Do not ignore.


Refeeding risk (important overlap)

Most TPN patients are malnourished.

Always:

  • Check electrolytes first
  • Give thiamine
  • Start slowly
  • Monitor daily

Refeeding syndrome can happen with TPN too.


Practical ward workflow

If thinking about TPN:

Ask:

  1. Can the gut be used?
  2. If yes → NG/enteral
  3. If no → refer nutrition team
  4. Check electrolytes
  5. Monitor daily

Simple and safe.


Common real-life scenarios

Scenario 1

Post-op ileus, 7 days NBM
→ TPN appropriate


Scenario 2

Elderly patient eating poorly
→ NOT TPN → dietitian + supplements first


Scenario 3

Severe pancreatitis
→ try enteral first → TPN only if not tolerated


Scenario 4

On TPN + fever
→ think line sepsis → escalate urgently


Common junior mistakes

  • Starting TPN too early
  • Forgetting NG feeding option
  • Not involving dietitians
  • Missing refeeding risk
  • Ignoring line infections
  • Not checking daily bloods

TPN problems are often preventable.


Take-home concept

If the gut works, use it.
TPN is last resort, high risk, and needs specialist input.
Your job is to recognise indications, monitor closely, and spot complications early.